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The following events occurred in March 1982:

March 1, 1982 (Monday)

  • Iran’s parliament, the Majlis, voted to allow the Islamic Republic’s government to sell the historic treasures that had been collected by the deposed Shah of Iran during his reign.
  • The Soviet Union’s Venera 3 probe landed on the surface of the planet Venus and returned data for two hours and seven minutes, eventually failing under temperatures of 457 °C (855 °F). The probe returned eight photographs of the surface, the first since the original Venera lander had transmitted the first pictures on October 22, 1975.[1]

March 2, 1982 (Tuesday)

  • Engineered by the terrorist group Sendero Luminoso, a mass prison escape freed 255 inmates from incarceration in the Peruvian city of Ayacucho. In the 5-hour battle, 16 people were killed, including two prison guards.[2]
  • France’s Law of Decentralization, drafted by Interior Minister Gaston Defferre, was passed into law by the Assemblée nationale, creating the administrative regions of France, a new level of subnational divisions between the départements and the national government. While the 96 metropolitan départements continue to have autonomy, they were grouped into 22 metropolitan régions française [3] which through mergers have now become 13. The reform also gave autonomy and limited self-government to some minority-populated areas with the creation of the collectivité territoriale, including the island of Corsica.[4] With self-government for Corsica, the French government released the remaining members of the Fronte di Liberazione Naziunale di a Corsica, including Alain Orsoni, from the Fleury-Mérogis Prison.[5]
  • South Korea‘s government announced a general amnesty for 2,863 prisoners, including 297 dissidents deemed as political offenders. While former opposition leader Kim Dae Jung was not released, his sentence of life imprisonment was reduced to 20 years incarceration. Observers noted that none of 419 of South Korea’s known political prisoners were scheduled for release.
  • U.S. Secretary of State Alexander Haig said in testimony to the House Foreign Affairs Committee that he had “overwhelming and irrefutable” evidence that a rebellion against El Salvador‘s right-wing military government was being directed by foreign powers.[6] The House voted, 396 to 3, to urge U.S. President Ronald Reagan to press for unconditional discussions among El Salvador’s political factions to “guarantee a safe and stable environment for free and open elections.”
  • Israeli troops began removing Jewish settlers from Ophira, an unauthorized settlement near Sharm el-Sheik on the southern tip of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula in advance of the scheduled April 25 withdrawal of Israel from the area.
  • An assassination attempt was made in Belfast against Lord Lowry, the Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland, as Irish Republican Army two gunmen fired on him as he arrived at Queen’s University for a luncheon. Lowry was wounded in the thigh.
  • TriStar Pictures was founded a joint filmmaking venture by three companies (Columbia Pictures, CBS and HBO) as “Nova Pictures”, although the name would be changed a year later to avoid confusion with the PBS television series Nova.[7]
  • Born: Anup Bhandari, Indian composer and Kannada language film director known for directing the popular 2015 mystery film RangiTaranga; in Puttur, Karnataka
  • Died:

March 3, 1982 (Wednesday)

  • Chavviram Singh Yadav, one of India’s most notorious bandit leaders in the Chambal Valley, was killed in a 90-minute gunbattle in the city of Etah in Uttar Pradesh state police, along with 12 of his followers. In addition to terrorizing state residents with his random attacks, Chavviram also committed murders in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. His body and those of his henchmen were then displayed on posts at the town of Aliganj. The Indian press reported his death on March 5.

March 4, 1982 (Thursday)

March 5, 1982 (Friday)

  • Zhao Cangbi, the Minister of Public Security for the People’s Republic of China, announced a plan to release of 4,327 former Republic of China government officials who had been imprisoned for more than 30 years since the defeat of Chiang Kai-shek by the Chinese Communist Army in 1949. Zhao told the National People’s Congress that the government would pay the expenses for transport for those who wanted to move to Taiwan, and that those who chose to stay and who were still able to work would be given jobs. A bulletin from the government’s Xinhua News Agency quoted Zhao as saying “These former Kuomintang personnel in custody have repented and by and large have turned over a new leaf after a long period of education and reform.
  • Venera 14, the second of two Soviet space probes, landed on Venus and sent data for about one hour. As with Venera 13, the probe returned data to other Soviet spaceships flying by the planet, which then relayed images back to Earth.
Belushi in 1979

March 6, 1982 (Saturday)

  • Five Egyptian Moslem fundamentalists were sentenced to death for their role in the October 6 assassination of Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat, with four having been the soldiers who had opened fire on Sadat while he was reviewing a military parade (including their leader, Lt. Khaled Ahmed el-Istambouly) and the fifth having been an associate who had provided the ammunition. Another 17 defendants were convicted as accessories and given terms ranging from one year up to life in prison.[14]
  • Died: Ayn Rand, 72, American philosopher, novelist and non-fiction writer known for The Fountainhead (1943) and for Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal (1966), and for editing The Objectivist.[15]

March 7, 1982 (Sunday)

  • Elections were held in Guatemala for president, with General Angel Anibal Guevara reportedly getting most of the vote, despite a call for a boycott by leftist leaders.[16] The Guatemalan government was overthrown 16 days later by dissatisfied army officers.

March 8, 1982 (Monday)

  • The People’s Republic of China approved a reorganization plan to reduce the number of ministries from 12 to six, to reduce the number of Vice-Premiers from 13 to 2, and to consolidate 98 state council organizations to 52, with a forecast to fire more than one-third of the 49,000 ministerial staff members to only 32,000.
  • The British House of Commons voted, 177 to 13, to approve the patriation bill allowing Canada to create its own constitution. Fewer than one-third of the 635 members of Commons turned out to vote.[17] The House of Lords followed suit on March 25, and the bill was sent to Queen Elizabeth II for royal assent, which came on March 29.

March 9, 1982 (Tuesday)

  • Charles Haughey was elected as the new Taoiseach, the prime minister of Ireland, by the Dail, by a vote of 86 to 79 over his opponent, Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald.[18]
  • The U.S. Department of Defense released aerial reconnaissance photographs which it said proved that the leftist Republic of Nicaragua was attempting to build, with help from the Soviet Union and Cuba, the largest military force in Central America.[19]

March 10, 1982 (Wednesday)

  • The day of the “Jupiter Effect” arrived as all nine of the Solar System’s planets were on the same side of the Sun, within a 95 degree arc.[20] The eventual syzygy of the planets had been predicted decades earlier, but the event had been the basis for a bestselling book in 1974, The Jupiter Effect, by John Gribbin and Stephen Plagemann. The two wrote that the combined gravitational pull of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Mars, Venus, Mercury and Pluto would likely wreak havoc on Earth, although the predictions were dismissed by most astronomers and astrophysicists, and no unusual events occurred on the day of the syzygy.[21]
  • Euro TV was launched in Italy by Gianni Ferrauto and Calisto Tanzi, with syndicated programming to 18 stations that broadcast identical programs for six hours nationwide each day, with the remainder left to the affiliates’ individual choices.[22] The network would last for five years, until being superseded on September 5, 1987, by the Odeon 24 network.
  • The United States placed an embargo on Libyan petroleum imports, citing Libya’s involvement of state-sponsored terrorism.[23]
  • The Washington Post published an investigative report that asserted that President Reagan had authorized the creation of a CIA-trained paramilitary force of 500 people from other Latin American nations to lead commando raids inside Nicaragua to overthrow the Sandinista government.The State Department confirmed the next day that it had secretly provided $10.4 million in financial support to “non-Marxist democratic forces” and that it was prepared to provide $7.4 million more.[24]
  • Died: Tadj ol-Molouk, 85, mother of the late Shah of Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and former Queen consort of Iran from 1925 to 1941 as wife of Reza Shah, died in exile in Mexico at the Pahlavi family residence in Acapulco.

March 11, 1982 (Thursday)

  • U.S. Senator Harrison A. Williams Jr. of New Jersey resigned as the Senate was preparing to vote on a resolution to expel him from office following his 1981 conviction for bribery and conspiracy in the FBI’s Abscam operation.[25]

March 12, 1982 (Friday)

  • At a press conference and briefing at the U.S. Department of State, Orlando Jose Tardencillas was introduced as proof that Marxist nations were attempting to gain control of Central America. Tardencillas, a 19-year-old Nicaraguan rebel, had been captured in El Salvador and confessed to being trained along with other Nicaraguans in Cuba and Ethiopia. When the news conference began, however, Tardencillas recanted his confession, denied that he had been trained abroad, and told reporters that he had “obviously been presented for purposes of propaganda.[26]
  • The village of Valle de Paz (“Valley of Peace”) was founded in Belize in Central America as a refugee community for immigrants fleeing from the Salvadoran Civil War.[27]
  • The U.S. Department of Labor announced the first decrease in the consumer price index since February 1976, after six years of constant inflation.[28]
  • The 1.2 miles (1.9 km) long Aberdeen Tunnel opened in Hong Kong between Wong Chuk Hang and Happy Valley.[29]
  • The highest-grossing Bengali language film of the year in India, the action comedy Shathe Shathyang, directed by Dinen Gupta and starring Ranjit Mallick and Mahua Roy Choudhury, was released.
  • The U.S. film Missing, directed by Costa-Gavras, starring Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek, and adapted from a book about the 1973 arrest and execution of American journalist Thomas Hauser in Chile, was released nationwide in the United States.[30]
  • Died: Dave “Fat Man” Williams, 61, American jazz and rhythm and blues bandleader known for the brass standard “I Ate Up the Apple Tree”.[31]

March 13, 1982 (Saturday)

March 14, 1982 (Sunday)

March 15, 1982 (Monday)

March 16, 1982 (Tuesday)

  • Claus von Bulow was found guilty on two counts of attempted murder of his wife, Sunny von Bulow, by a jury in Newport, Rhode Island.[36][37]
  • Soviet head of state and party leader Leonid Brezhnev announced that the Soviet Union was halting further deployment of SS-20 nuclear missiles in Eastern Europe.[38] U.S. officials in Moscow responded by saying that the unilateral move was propaganda that had come the day after the U.S. said that the Soviets had already placed 300 intermediate-range missiles Warsaw Pact nations and was constructing five additional bases.[39]

March 17, 1982 (Wednesday)

  • Four members of a Dutch television crew were killed by Salvadoran troops while traveling with leftist guerrillas as war correspondents.[40] The four men— Jacobus Andries Koster, jan Kuiper, Johannes Willemsen and Hans ter Laan— were in El Salvador’s Chalatenango province to report on daily life in rebel held areas when their escorts opened fire on the Salvadoran Army unit.
  • The first contingent of U.S. participants in a 3,000 member international peacekeeping force arrived in the Sinai arrived with 670 of a planned 1,200 U.S. Army troops.[41]
  • In India, the state of Kerala was placed under President’s Rule after its Chief Minister and his cabinet resigned.[42] The next day, the government of the state of Assam came under direct rule.

March 18, 1982 (Thursday)

March 19, 1982 (Friday)

  • At the United Nations, Nicaragua‘s ambassador called for an urgent meeting of the UN Security Council to intervene in what it called “an imminent invasion” by American combat troops or by U.S.-trained paramilitary forces.[45]
  • Argentine scrap metal workers, whose group had been infiltrated by Marines from the South American nation, raised the flag of Argentina on South Georgia and the Falkland Islands, two British overseas territories long claimed by Argentina. The demonstration would be followed by an invasion of the Islands on April 2 by Argentine forces.

March 20, 1982 (Saturday)

March 21, 1982 (Sunday)

  • The United Auto Workers (UAW) labor union made concessions along with General Motors Corporation (GM) in reaching a 30-month contract, similar to the UAW concessions to the Ford Motor Company earlier in the year. GM called of its plans to close four factories or to lay off 11,000 workers, pledging to make no closings for two years, and the UAW agreed to give up worker benefits including guaranteed pay raises and an extension of paid vacations.[51]

March 22, 1982 (Monday)

  • The third flight of the American space shuttle Columbia was launched from Cape Canaveral with astronauts Jack Lousma and C. Gordon Fullerton, colonels in the U.S. Marines and U.S. Air Force, respectively.[52] The mission was plagued with problems, but was the first to depart on the scheduled launch day, when it was witnessed by a crowd of 750,000 people.
  • The Islamic Republic of Iran launched Operation Fath ol-Mobin, a large attack on Iraqi invaders who had reached the southern Iranian city of Shush. The Pasdaran and Basij brigades of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, each with 1,000 fighters, were sent on a pincer movement to encircle the Iraqis.[53] The attack came exactly 18 months after the September 22, 1980 launch of the Iran–Iraq War. Iranian Chinook helicopters landed behind Iraqi lines in a surprise attack and captured the Iraqi forces and their artillery.[54]
  • The U.S. State Department released a report to prove that the Soviet Union and its allies had used chemical warfare that killed more than 10,000 deaths various nations in Asia, including 3,000 people in 47 chemical attacks in Afghanistan since the invasion’s start at the end of 1978.[55] In addition, the report charged that the Communist regimes in Laos and Vietnam had used trichothecene and other chemical agents against Hmong rebels and killed at least 6,504 people in 261 separate attacks, and that the Khmer Rouge government in Cambodia had killed 981 people with lethal chemicals.
  • A nitrate fire broke out in Mexico’s film archive at the Cineteca Nacional in Mexico City, destroying reels from 6,506 productions from the “Golden Age of Mexican Cinema“.[56]
  • The supernova SN 1982C, which had occurred in the NGC 4185 galaxy group more than 214 million years earlier, was observed from Earth for the first time. The discoverers on Earth was astronomers Béla Szeidl and Miklós Lovas of the Konkoly Observatory in Budapest.[57]
  • Died:

March 23, 1982 (Tuesday)

  • The government of Guatemala’s president, General Romeo Lucas Garcia, was overthrown 16 days after an election had been held for a new president. The Lucas regime was replaced by a three-man junta, headed by retired General Efrain Rios Montt, with the assistance of General Horacio Maldonado Schaad and Colonel Luis Gordillo Martinez.
  • The government of Israel‘s Prime Minister Menachem Begin faced three consecutive motions of no confidence in the Knesset, with all three ending in a 58 to 58 tie. Although the coalition government led by Begin’s Likud party was not required to dissolve the motion passed, Begin proposed that he and his cabinet should resign, but the cabinet ministers voted, 12 to 6, to remain in power.[61]

March 24, 1982 (Wednesday)

  • In a coup d’état in Bangladesh, General Hussain Muhammad Ershad ousted President Abdus Sattar, ending three years of civilian rule in the Asian nation. In a radio broadcast, Ershad, who gave himself the title of martial law administrator, suspended the nation’s constitution and instituted martial law, and said, “I am a soldier. My whole and sole aim is to reestablish democracy in accordance with the hopes and aspirations of the people,” and pledged to appoint a civilian president and to hold elections “as soon as possible.”[62]
  • The U.S. Senate voted unanimously, 94 to 0, to slow creation of new federal government regulations by adding a new step of cost-benefit analysis before publishing proposed regulations for “notice and comment“, and required that independent agencies select the least costly method of attaining beneficial objectives. The U.S. Congress, for the first time, would have the power of a “legislative veto” (approved by a 69 to 25 vote) over a proposed regulation within 45 days of its publication, although the U.S. Department of Defense, the Federal Reserve System and the Securities and Exchange Commission would be exempt from being vetoed.

March 25, 1982 (Thursday)

Soviet leader Brezhnev

March 26, 1982 (Friday)

March 27, 1982 (Saturday)

March 28, 1982 (Sunday)

March 29, 1982 (Friday)

March 30, 1982 (Saturday)

Columbia landing in New Mexico
  • Space Shuttle Columbia ended its third mission the eight-day long STS-3. For the first and only time in the history of the shuttle, the spacecraft landed in New Mexico at the White Sands Space Harbor, near Alamogordo, rather than the originally planned landing site, Edwards Air Force Base in California.[86]
  • The El Chichon volcano near Nicapa in the Mexican state of Chiapas erupted, killing at least 10 people, injuring 200 others and forcing 20,000 to flee their homes.[87]
  • A large paratrooper airdrop in the California desert killed four U.S. Army soldiers and injured at least 71, 11 of whom were hospitalized.[88]

March 31, 1982 (Sunday)

  • Six of the 10 members of the ruling Politburo of the Communist Party of Vietnam were removed from their jobs, including General Vo Nguyen Giap, who had led Communist forces in North Vietnam in defeating French and American forces over nearly 30 years, as well as foreign minister Nguyen Duy Trinh, economic planner Le Thanh Nghi, former interior minister Tran Quoc Hoan and peace negotiator Xuan Thuy.[95] The de facto ruler, Communist Party First Secretary Le Duan, retained his post along with President Truong Chinh, Prime Minister Pham Van Dong, Interior Minister Pham Hung and peace negotiator Le Duc Tho.
  • A freighter from Haiti sank in the Gulf of Mexico, killing at least 20 refugees who were being smuggled into the United States by the crew. Although the six survivors of the ship claimed that there had been only 10 people aboard, bodies began washing ashore on beaches in Broward County, Florida.[96]


References

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  2. ^ UPI (March 4, 1982). “255 Jail Inmates Freed in Assault”. Sarasota (FL) Herald-Tribune.
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